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<UID>
8601300427
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
860706
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, July 06, 1986
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Associated Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1986, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
NAVRATILOVA TAKES THE FIFTH AT WIMBLEDON
CHAMPION WITHOUT A COUNTRY: MARTINA STUCK IN THE MIDDLE
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
WIMBLEDON, England -- She is still halfway between there and here, like
an infant frozen in those first steps from mother to father. Behind Martina
Navratilova is a country, a family, and now, five straight Wimbledon
championships. Alongside her is a Texas estate, a woman friend, an American
coach. Ahead of her still lies acceptance, a place in  our hearts. And there
is no telling when it will all come together.
So even as she stood there Saturday at Centre Court, her arms raised in
triumph, the Wimbledon crowd cheering loudly if not enthusiastically,  she was
yet a woman in fragments, fitted together like a jigsaw puzzle.

  Consider the scene: Across the net was a shadow image of herself, Hana
Mandlikova, a Czech star who still lives there, and  who, like many
countrymen, still harbors some resentment for Navratilova's defection 11 years
ago.
  Then, in the corner box reserved for players' guests, sat Navratilova's
mother, father, and sister,  Jana. They cheered for her. They waved at her.
But, as Czech citizens, they could not go home and live with her.
  Next to them sat Mike Estep, her coach of three years, and next to him,
Judy Nelson,  "Martina's special lady friend," as the tabloids here put it.
They can accompany Navratilova back to America, but Nelson, a mother of two,
is still married to someone else, and Estep has his own family.
  "Who was watching this back in Ft. Worth?" Navratilova was asked, after
defeating Mandlikova,  7-6, 6-3.
  "The woman who watches my house said she and all the animals watched,"
Navratilova said.  And then she half-laughed. "Five dogs and a cat watching
TV."
  Home.
  How long has Martina Navratilova been the best in her business? Three
years? Four years? Eight years? It was, after all, in  1978 that she first
finished the year ranked as No. 1.
  She has  won everything that matters. Twice. She holds the longest
consecutive match win streak in women's tennis. She has earned more than  $10
million in prize money alone.  At Wimbledon, she has lost exactly two sets in
the last five years.
  Yet has anyone ever reigned longer and been loved less? Ivan Lendl, another
Czech, is on his  cold and distant way. But Martina has a few years on him.
John McEnroe, for all his antics, is hated more vehemently, but also embraced
more heartily. Big Mac can always find a home. Who will ask Martina to come by
for dinner?
  When she plays Chris Evert Lloyd in a big final -- as she seems to do all
the time -- the sentiment is always with Chris. Name one time it wasn't.
Playing the semifinals here  against stunning teenager Gabriela Sabatini,
"only made Martina look more like a border guard than usual," wrote one U.S.
journalist. Fans concede her greatness, but think nothing of insulting her.
She  is seen as a machine, capable of winning whenever she wants. Why should
she need something as human as fan support?
  Admiration. Disdain.
  She is left, again, somewhere in between.
  Of course  Martina's defection to America in 1975 is the tallest fence
across her personal meadows. Had she been born in the USA, her acceptance
there would be assured. Or, were she still a Czech -- instead of  a U.S.
citizen -- she would at least have a place to hear the "home court" cheers.
  Instead, she is stranded in the middle, the best tennis player her homeland
never saw.
  Which is what made Saturday's  match against Mandlikova so fascinating. The
two have known each other since the early '70s. They met at the prestigious
Sparta Sports Club in Prague, where Navratilova was a teenage star when
Mandlikova  was just a ball girl. In fact, the first pro match a 12-year-old
Mandlikova ever saw was between Navratilova and Renata Tomanova.
  "Which player would you like to be the ball girl for?" Mandlikova  was
asked.
  "Martina," she answered quickly.
  Her idol.
  Now, 12 years and an Iron Curtain later, they were across the net from each
other. Wimbledon finalists.
  The match began, and Mandlikova  -- who toppled Navratilova at the U.S.
Open last year -- dominated the early going. She hit winners off Martina's
serve, mixed her shots, rushed the net, and left the defending champion
screaming at  herself: "Disgusting! . . . Jesus Christ! . . . Come on!"
  And before you could say "The All England Lawn Tennis Club," Mandlikova had
a 5-2 lead.
  Then she changed her shoes and, for some reason,  everything else followed
suit. Somewhere between Games 7 and 8,  like an intruder in the palace,
Mandlikova stepped on a creaky floorboard. And the giant named Navratilova
woke up.
  From that point  on it was run for the beanstalk. Navratilova, when she
wasn't blasting a terribly effective serve,  camped at the net and poked
volleys everywhere Mandlikova was not. The young Czech went limp. She lost
three straight, held serve, then finally fell in a tie-breaker.
  "Did you ever think you might lose?" someone asked Navratilova afterward.
  "Not really," she said. "The closer we got to this match, the more I saw
myself hoisting that trophy."
  How fast would it come? How fast could she serve? Navratilova even rushed
the ball boys once she started rolling.
  Twenty-nine minutes and the second  set was history. When her final volley
skipped past Mandlikova, Navratilova shrieked, and threw her arms up high.
Five Wimbledons in a row! Only Suzanne Lenglen and Bjorn Borg had ever
accomplished that. 
  Yet even at that purest moment of victory, the seams of Martina's life were
in plain view. She shook hands with her opponent who, under other
circumstances, would be a travel partner, a close friend.  She held the
winner's silver plate and blew a kiss to her family -- whom she  sees only
when the Czech government allows it. And when she came to the interview room,
some of the journalists clapped,  while the others did not.
  "A smattering of applause," she wryly observed.
  Half here, half there. Once again.
  So you cannot blame Martina for being hungry for history. That, after all,
is one family that cannot reject her. Eight Wimbledon singles titles (the
record held by Helen Wills Moody). Twenty overall Wimbledon titles (singles
and doubles, held by Billie Jean King.) These are the  blips on her periscope
now -- especially with Lloyd on the threshold of retirement.
  "How much longer can you play?" Navratilova, 29, was asked.
  "Oh, God. Your guess is as good as mine," she said.  "Maybe three, four
more years."
  "Does it get harder to win here each year?" came a question.
  "It gets harder because it means more," she said.
  Maybe numbers will do it. Maybe the more she  accomplishes, the more she
will whittle down people's resistance. And maybe not. The average fan still
cannot relate to her warrior attitude, or her self-professed lesbianism, or
her birthplace, or her  humor, or her looks. She has a reputation of being
distant and steel-edged -- are there any Czech players who don't have that
reputation? -- but that is unfair.
  People would be surprised to know  that between Navratilova and Lloyd, it
is Martina who is more emotional, more highly strung. Chris has a nerve of
steel with the face of a glee club president. Martina's curse is that her
features are the other way around.
  So she is admired but not loved, written about but not understood. There
always seems to be a sharp side to a comment -- even when she's kidding. After
winning Saturday, she  was congratulated by Kitty Godfree, 90, the oldest
surviving Wimbledon champion, a little white-haired woman in black pumps.
  "I'd love to get a chance to hit with her," Navratilova joked on TV
afterward.
  "You're going to challenge her?" teased the interviewer.
  'Yeah," Martina laughed. "I challenge you, Kitty."
  It was a joke. But it came off wrong. 
  In a few weeks, Navratilova will return  for the first time in 11 years to
Czechoslovakia for a Federation Cup match. There is a chance she could play
Mandlikova again in the final, a fascinating sword-cross of civics and
sentiment.
  "What  are your feelings about going back?" someone asked Navratilova.
  "Well, I'm really looking forward to going home," she answered. Then she
paused, and added, "Ft. Worth, that is. I can't wait to go  home first and
then go to Czechoslovakia."
  She paused. At a moment like this -- when she has to distinguish between
homelands, when a family is waiting, but with limited time, when she has
lassoed glory, but only lukewarm applause -- it is hard to watch Martina
Navratilova closely and not feel something for all she has gone through.
  She is Wimbledon's champion. She is the best in her business. She has
pulled the pieces of a patchwork life together into a powerful, healthy whole.
  But the seams still show. And they will for a while.
CUTLINE:
Martina Navratilova throws her arms into the  air after winning her fifth
straight Wimbledon singles championship.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN;MARTINA NAVRATILOVA;TENNIS
</KEYWORDS>
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